LEANDER AND HERO – STAR CROSSED LOVERS! #BLOGCHATTERA2Z

 

           
Paleothea

Leander or Leandros (Lion Man) was a young leader from Abydos. One day, he attended a festival where he came across the modest and beautiful Hero, who was a priestess of the goddess Aphrodite, and hence, lived in chastity. Leander fell in love with her at first sight. He used his charm and his wiles to make her respond to his advances.

As Hero lived in Sestos, there was a whole sea, the Hellespont, which separated Europe from Asia, and the lovers as well. Every night, Leander would swim across the sea, guided only by a lamp that Hero would keep alight on the top of her tower. Thus, a whole summer went by with the lovers falling even more deeply in love.


                                                       Hero Guiding Leander - The Eclectic Light Company

One stormy night, Leander set out as usual, making his way across the Hellespont. However, the wind blew gustily, the night was dark and ominous, and the light guarded so fiercely by Hero went out. Leander struggled in the darkness, trying to find his way through the tumultuous waves, but finally, he lost his bearings and drowned.

‘The Double Heroides’ attributed to Ovid, the Roman poet, speaks of an exchange of letters between the lovers where Leander is unable to swim across the sea due to inclement weather. However, Hero urges him to do so, leading to the fatal consequences.

In Sir Walter Raleigh’s poem – ‘The Ocean’s Love to Cynthia’, there is a reference to Hero falling asleep and the lamp going out.

In another poem by Alfred Tennyson, Leander gets across to Hero’s tower, and she begs him not to leave till morning when the sea is calm again.

“Thou shalt not wander hence tonight, I’ll stay thee with my kisses.”

When Hero heard of Leander’s drowning, she was heartbroken. She threw herself off her tower, and fell to her death, hoping to meet her lover in the afterlife. Both their bodies washed up on shore together, and were buried in a deep embrace in one grave.

Hero finding Leander drowned - Picryl

John Donne, the poet, summed up the story in a single poignant couplet:

“Both robbed of air, we both lie in one ground,

Both whom one fire had burned, one water drowned.”

The sad story of Leander and Hero has been the subject throughout the realms of art, music and literature, a heartbreaking tale of love, gained and lost.

Trivia:

The earliest reference to the myth was by Musaeus, a Greek poet in the 4th or 5th century BC.


                                                                                                 Routledge

Shakespeare was fond of referring to the saga of Hero and Leander. Their names come up in The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Much Ado About Nothing, Othello, Romeo and Juliet and As You Like it.

Christopher Marlowe wrote the poem titled ‘Hero and Leander’ but stopped it at the point they fell in love. The poem was completed by George Chapman after Marlowe’s death.


Internet Archive

Art:

The painting titled ‘The Last Watch of Hero’ by Fredric Leighton


                                                                                                                Picryl

   This post is a part of Blogchatter A2Z Challenge 2026


Comments

  1. Such a heartfelt story, no wonder why it was referred in Romeo & Juliet.

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  2. The way you captured Leander and Hero as star-crossed lovers really brings out the quiet intensity of their devotion; love guided by light, yet undone by fate. It lingers with a sense of beauty and inevitability.

    ReplyDelete

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